I Am Not A RoBOt! Are You? | David Reibman
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I Am Not A RoBOt! Are You? | David Reibman

Opening Reception

By Chashama

Date and time

Saturday, May 10 · 12 - 5pm EDT

Location

266 W 37th St

266 West 37th Street New York, NY 10018

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 7 days before event

About this event

  • Event lasts 5 hours

“I Am Not A RoBOt! Are You?”

Are you sure YOU are not a RoBOt? “Of course I am not a RoBOt!” You say But, are you really sure?

Do you say to yourself “I don’t do politics” while politics is busy doing you? You just might be a RoBOt!

Do you play video games non stop, watch TikTok all day, or endlessly scroll through Instagram or Facebook? Yes,You just might be a RoBOt!

Do you subject yourself to endless TV commercials about drugs you didn’t know you needed with side effects like death? You better be a RoBOt!

Ok, but still, you think “I am not really a RoBOt! because I click on all the fire hydrants, the sidewalks, the bridges which proves it once and for all.”

Come to see “I Am Not A RoBOt! Are YOu?” Just to make 100 percent sure.

About the Artist

David Reibman, an American Artist, grew up in Washington Heights, New York, studied at the School for Musical Education for 9 years, and attended Music and Art High School in Manhattan, majoring in violin. His first job was working in the local camera store’s basement darkroom. He switched to Art at Cooper Union and at the California Institute of the Arts, where he started working in color. He discovered a pair of old panoramic postcards showing the Duluth, Minnesota skyline which resulted in a study of panoramic images that became his style, “Mollage”. Single photographic images are made of people, in the same location, at different times, which combined reveals a progression of time, telling small stories by uniting them into one complete artwork. David lived in Locarno Switzerland for a year, visited Italy often, including Venice, 7 times, where he studied Italian, while creating “Mollage” images. He then spent time in Kyoto, Kamakura and lived in Tokyo for 6 months making more “Mollages”. He worked at CBS News for 33 years as a video editor. He also produced a film “Say Their Names” and is completing another film “The Story Of The Four Bagels and The One Empanada”.

Organized by

Chashama helps create a more diverse, equitable and inclusive world by partnering with property owners to transform unused real estate into artist workspace, presentation space and space for free art classes for seniors and youth.

Free